Thyroid Disease Flashcards
What releases TRH?
The paraventricular nuclei in the hypothalamus
Where is TSH released from?
Thyrotrope cells in the anterior pituitary
Is T3 or T4 more relevant?
T4 is more relevant because the thyroid releases T4 and T3 at a ratio of about 20:1 respectively, with T3 mainly being produced by peripheral conversion of T4
Free T4 is roughly how much of total T4?
~1%
What is T4’s half-life and what is the significance of this?
T4 has a half-life of about 1 week, therefore when monitoring the impact of an intervention, you need to wait several weeks before repeating LFTs
List 10 clinical features of hypothyroidism
- Lethargy
- Weight gain
- Cold intolerance
- Constipation
- Hair loss
- Dry skin
- Depression
- Bradycardia
- Memory impairment
- Menorrhagia
List 14 clinical features of hyperthyroidism
- Tachycardia
- Palpitations (atrial fibrillation)
- Hyperactivity
- Weight loss with increase appetite
- Heat intolerance
- Sweating
- Diarrhoea
- Fine tremor
- Hyper-reflexia
- Goitre
- Palmar erythema
- Onycholysis
- Muscle weakness and wasting
- Oligomenorrhea/ amenorrea
List 7 clinical features of Grave’s Disease
- Exophthalmos/ proptosis
- Chemosis
- Diffuse symmetrical goitre
- Pretibial myxoedema (rare)
- Other autoimmune conditions
- Thyroid bruit
- Acropachy
What would a raised TSH and a low T4 indicate?
Primary hypothyroidism
What may a normal T4 in the context of a raised TSH suggest?
Sub clinical hypothyroidism (most commonly caused by an underlying autoimmune disease)
List 7 causes of primary hypothyroidism
- Autoimmune thyroiditis (50%)
- Iodine deficiency or excess
- Thyroidectomy
- Therapy with radioactive iodine (treatment for hyperthyroidism)
- External radiotherapy
- Drugs
- Thyroid agenesis or dysgenesis
What is primary hypothyroidism?
Reduced secretion of thyroid hormone from the thyroid gland itself
What is secondary hypothyroidism?
Reduction in the hormones that stimulate the thyroid to produce thyroxine
Is primary or secondary hypothyroidism more common?
Primary is more common (99%) vs secondary (1%)
What would a normal/low TSH and a low T4 indicate?
Secondary hypothyroidism
What are the two types of causes of secondary hypothyroidism?
Pituitary or hypothalamic (TRH is not measured as part of thyroid function tests as it is only released locally between hypothalamus and pituitary, therefore both structures are commonly grouped together into ‘secondary causes’ because an issue with TRH and TSH both show up as simply decrease TSH)
List two pituitary causes of secondary hypothyroidism
- Pituitary adenoma (most common cause)
2. Pituitary surgery or radiotherapy
List two hypothalamic causes of secondary hypothyroidism
- Hypothalamic or suprasellar tumour
2. Surgery or radiotherapy which damages the hypothalamic tissue
What is primary hyperthyroidism?
Excessive production of T3 and T4 by the thyroid gland itself as a result of pathology within the thyroid gland itself
What would a raised T3/T4 and a low TSH indicate?
Primary hyperthyroidism
List 5 causes of primary hyperthyroidism
- Graves’ Disease (75% of all cases)
- Toxic multinodular goitre
- Toxic adenoma
- Iodine-induced (rare)
- Trophoblastic tumour (rare)
What is secondary hyperthyroidism?
Stimulation of thyroid gland by excessive TSH
What would a raised T3/T4 and a raised TSH indicate?
Secondary hyperthyroidism
List 3 causes of secondary hyperthyroidism
- TSH-secreting tumour
- Chorionic-gonadotropin secreting tumour
- Thyroid hormone resistance (usually euthyroid) - TSH is resistant to T3/T4 negative feedback